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Hey you textaholic!

Having a cellphone makes being connected all the time possible, it doesn’t make it necessary.

Updated on: Feb 20, 2011 01:54 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Yesterday, my corporate honcho friend, Jayant, went from being super-happy to being super-depressed, in a matter of two hours. And when he came crying to me, I told him it’s his own doing. He’s calling me insensitive but I want you all to tell me if I was right or not.

Yesterday he was all excited about going for lunch with an old friend, a girl he used to have a crush on in school. They’d lost touch over the years and facebook got them back in contact. Their date began on a great note but soon the girl told him he’s being rude and left the lunch in-between. You know why? Because Jayant-the stupid was texting on his cellphone the entire time. ‘What’s rude in that? I wasn’t talking on the phone, just exchanging some important messages,’ he asked me.

‘It is definitely not done if a human being around you has to compete for attention with a gadget in your hand,’ I said, knowing well that I too suffered from always-checking-the-cellphone-syndrome. But one day of being on the receiving end of this treatment made me realise how it feels when the person you’re talking to, is constantly typing away on his or her mobile. It could be anyone doing it … your friend, your spouse, your colleague or even your teenaged son/daughter, and they may think that they are attending to something earth shatteringly important … but you know what, it’s wrong and you should not put up with it.

Here are three ways of dealing with people who have a cell phone surgically attached to their hands:

HT Image
HT Image

1. Set a rule that your meeting with them will be cellphone free. Unless your friend is the Prime Minister of the country or an emergency surgeon, there’s no reason why he/she can’t put the phone in the bag for a little while. Actually, even the Prime Minister can. Cellphones have made it possible for us to stay connected all the time, they haven’t made it necessary that we do. Constantly exchanging messages with someone remote only shows that it’s more important than the real conversation happening in front of you. And two-timing’s never right, is it?

2. Don’t carry on talking to someone whose eyes (and thumb) is constantly on the phone. It’s wrong to be wasting your words on a person who may be uploading his dog’s picture on facebook as you speak . If you stop saying anything, the person is bound to look up and in all probability, will say, ‘Go on, I’m listening.’ Just reply, ‘No it’s okay. First finish what you are doing as it may be important.’ That usually gets the point across and they put the phone away. You need not be rude to a rude person. Just remember to be clear, not sarcastic.

 
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